Rawlings Primo Series: PRM1275
Features
Trapeze Web
Professional pattern is large and deep for trapping high flies
12.75 Inch Model
Conventional back / Fastback
Distinctive Oxblood Color
Direct Embroidery
European Full-Grain Leather - Born in Tuscany region of Italy
Italian calf lining for top of the line feel
Free Shipping
Position specific break points for oufielders
100% wool padding for extra cushion
Description
Reviews
Average Ratings Based on 18 Customer Reviews
DWR
Pros: The Rawling Primo gloves are the best on the market - bar none. I bought each of my boys the PRM1275 and the PRM1150T and they couldn't be happier. The gloves do take a little time to break in but once you get them broke in they are amazing. They have a great feel on your hand.
Cons: I here people say this glove is to heavy. If 4 extra ounces is to heavy lift some weights. The cost is not cheap but this is a glove that will last forever so do it up the right way once and you won't be sorry.
Homerun king
Pros: Durable, smells nice, the color is amazing, best glove ever.period.
Cons: no cons
JDH
Pros: EXCELLENT glove!!!!
Cons:
Anonymous
Pros: easy to break in, great quality, it looks beautiful.
Cons: its a little heavy
Cptplawyer
Pros: Part II I steamed it longer than broccoli, oiled it once more and put it away for the night. This morning, it seemed a bit softer, but still a ways to go. I got the mallet out for a bit before work. When I came home, the glove felt ok, but still stiff. I threw a ball into the glove. Enouraged, I asked my 5-year old to throw me a few in the garage. I got him to step perpendicular to his target and finish with his arm extended out and down to his left knee. It finally came together for him and it was magical to see, In that, I felt my glove pop and grab the ball. While my eyes were on him and where his arm finished, I realized the glove pulled every ball in like it was attached to Al Kaline. Excited, I steamed it like a country club sauna. I oiled, pounded, steamed, oiled, kneaded all again and again. I just put it away, but have this feeling it will the world's perfect glove. I can't wait. But, if not, I will always remember the first balls it caught.
Cons:
cptplawyer
Pros: Part I I bought the glove warned it would take a while to break in. I was concerned as I am busy with family and work. But, I was told it would become a great glove. You will need to beat this glove like a pinata and steam it like you are preparing vegetables for toothless rabbits. You will use about a bottle of glove oil in 3 days (seriously) in every orifice of the glove. You will bend every finger in ever direction. You will bend it inside and out, then pound the pocket for hours. In the end, you will love this glove. It really feels great. It snaps. It hugs the ball. Now, I can't swear it's the glove itself, the effort I put into it, or me projecting into it what it isn't after all the money and effort. But, heck, does it really matter? I received it 3 days ago. It felt like a rock. I could barely squeeze it. Fortunately, it arrived Saturday, so I was able to spend a lot of time oiling that day. By the end of the night, I wished the glove had a wet nurse.
Cons: I woke up excited to hold a soft glove. Alas, it was a rock. I beat it with a mallet as if it were those gophers in that game at Chuck E Cheese. Nothing. I was afraid to even try to play catch with it. Frustrated, I let it sit there like a boring toy. I played and swam with the family. As I sat in the pool, I wondered if I could steam it into submission. So, I filled my wife's vegetable steamer with water, oiled the glove for the 18th time, and set it in the tray like a head of cauliflower. I pulled it out. I oiled, worked, squeezed, kneaded, and bent it. I put it in positions you wouldn't see in a trapeze show. I hammered it and formed the pocket like a factory of seamstresses making parachute pants. It softened and moved. I thought I had it, but it cooled down and turned into a rock faster than Cinderella's escorts became pumpkins. Undaunted, I oiled, steamed, oiled, pounded, oiled .... Sadly, the glove cooled down in a way that a moon makes a wolf howl.
Anonymous
Pros: broke in really fast everything is strong nd it just feels good on ur hand
Cons: its just a little heavy nd really expensive
Jared12
Pros: Literally the nicest glove i have ever owned, and ive had tons of great gloves. It looks so much better in person and i was affraid it would be to soft and too heavy but neither are true!
Cons: NOTHING
wdeptfordbaseball23
Pros: very soft and has nice feel
Cons: heavy, very hard to break in and EXPENSIVE
Harold Banes
Pros: best glove in the market! Amazin leather, keeps its shape, and is relitevly easy to break in
Cons: $400! REALLY, REALLY, REALLY HEAVY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Anonymous
Pros: the best glove on the market. The color, the leather, everything about this glove is top of the line.
Cons: The price is high but knowing that you'll never have to buy another glove makes it well worth the $$$
softballserious
Pros: This glove is the bomb. Best made glove out there,with truly exceptional quality and function.
Cons: Not a thing.
D 4REAL
Pros: sickest glove ever made bar none...truely one of a kind!
Cons: i didnt get it sooner!
mitt docter
Pros: AMAZING great craftmanship so soft and supple best glove i ever had
Cons: a little heavy just takes a little getting used to
Up in smoke on 3rd.
Pros: This glove is the best made glove you can get; it is truly a pro's glove.
Cons: It is a bit heavy, so either work on the shoulder muscles or read the ball well.
Mikey21
Pros: Gorgeous craftmanship!
Cons: A little heavy.
Anonymous
Pros: This glove is amazing. It is everything they say and more, it is the best crafted glove on the market.
Cons:
Anonymous
Pros: This is the nicest, most well made glove I have ever had. It is well worth the investment.
Cons: The glove is a heavier than most.
Questions and Answers
Have a question about the Rawlings Primo Series: PRM1275? Ask our team of experts and they will respond within 24 hours.
Is the finger pad on the Primo series a gel pad? SFG 55
Can this glove be used for pitchers? homerun89654
Are there any left even though its been discontinued? glove man
I know this series of gloves has been discontinued but did the Primo line of gloves have individual production numbers on the gloves? Old Dude
About the Brand
Rawlings is a major manufacturer of competitive team sports equipment and apparel for baseball, basketball, and football, as well as licensed MLB, NFL, and NCAA retail products. Rawlings is a major supplier to professional, collegiate, interscholastic, and amateur organizations worldwide, including the Official Baseball Supplier to Major League Baseball.
The first real innovation in glove making occurred in 1912 when Rawlings Sporting Goods Company introduced the "Sure Catch" glove, which was "endorsed by leading players all over the country." The Sure Catch was a one-piece glove with sewn-in finger channels and looked better suited for a duck's foot than a man's hand. Catchers' mitts used at the time were large and bulky with a single leather thong passing for a web.
In 1920, Bill Doak, a journeyman pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals, approached Rawlings with an idea for improving the baseball glove from a mere protective device to a genuine aid in fielding. The "Bill Doak" model was so revolutionary that it stayed in Rawlings' line until 1953. Its key feature was a multi-thong web laced into the first finger and thumb, which created for the first time in baseball's young life, a natural pocket.
In 1925, Rawlings unveiled a three-fingered fielder's glove, and ten years later improved the Bill Doak model with a two-piece leather web. At the same time, the "T" web became a rage for first basemen's mitts. The pocket underwent a pronounced change in 1941 when the Trapper Mitt, also known as the Claw, appeared. The "Deep Well" pocket was so unique that Rawlings quickly patented it. The design was improved in 1950 by adding a leather piece across the top. Another significant creation occurred in 1948 with the three-fingered Playmaker. A five-fingered fielder's model, with all fingers laced together, provided greater pocket control.
The six-fingered Trap-Eze evolved in the 1960's. In more recent years, Rawlings produced the Fastback design, which gives a glove a snugger fit, greater extension, and overall control. The Holdster is a slot through which a finger can be extended for additional protection from impacts on the pocket. Then, there is the Edge-U-Cated Heel with its extended U-shaped lacing and the Pro H Web and much-copied Basket Web.
Some of Rawlings's more recent glove innovations also include the unique Spin-Stopper design which reduces ball spin when the ball hits the glove, and the Cantilever glove design feature that provides a cushioned area between the hand and the glove's palm area. In all, Rawlings has produced and patented more functionally innovative glove features and designs than that of any other glove manufacturer. The result is that the modern baseball glove is much larger, more comfortable, better padded, and made to last far longer than its ancestors. It is not uncommon to see today's Major League players wearing the same Rawlings glove they wore during their college playing days. In fact, Rawlings is the #1 glove in the major leagues. Rawlings maintains about 65 models of baseball and softball mitts and gloves in its line. The prototypes of virtually all of them have been field-tested by professionals before entering a sporting goods dealer's inventory.
Glove Properties
| Deals | Bundle and Save |
|---|---|
| Glove Type | Baseball |
| Sub Type | Fielders |
| Vendor | Rawlings |
| Web Type | Trapeze |
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